How do I find out what packages have been installed since the OS was installed? I do not want to know all packages installed, only those that were not part of the initial OS install, and have been explicitly installed afterwards.

For the sake of this question, lets assume a fresh install, as I imagine distro upgrades would complicate matters. I would prefer to use command line, but a GUI solution would be OK if a command or script is not available.

I've had a quick look at the man pages of dpkg and aptitude, but didn't see anything obvious. Also, the output of apt-cache show package-name or dpkg -s pkg-name doesn't seem to give any dates that can be compared against the date of OS installation (which I would have to work out how to get too).

I have logwatch on a server that sends daily notifications of what has been installed. My guess is that it parses dpkg.log. I'm not sure this method would be a solution, as many of the install entries may have been logrotated out, especially on older systems. And ideally this should work for any system, desktop or server.

It would also be great if the output could include the version of the package currently installed, but that may be asking too much, and I can always script it later once I have the package names.

I don't want to list 'all' installed packages, only those installed after the OS was installed. For example, the dpkg --get-selections | grep -v deinstall command outputs packages like xorg and wget - which would have been part of the initial install. I will edit the question.
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drgrogMay 12 '14 at 8:59

a diff between dpgk --get-selections 's output and this file will do something what you're looking for
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Ayush ShankerMay 12 '14 at 9:07

@karel the answer by bci, using the history.log, will not give you a full list if the logs do not go as far back as the original install
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drgrogMay 12 '14 at 14:53

@drgrog I can understand your point of view. What you have done is an improvement on answers that have already been posted by others and not a duplicate and your question is a worthy question and not a duplicate.
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karelMay 12 '14 at 16:44

2 Answers
2

All Ubuntu ISO ([UKLX]buntu/Ubuntu-gnome) comes with .manifest file that contains the list of all pre-installed packages in the ISO. You can find those manifest files in the same download dir as those ISO on any Ubuntu ISO mirrors. If you have Trusty 64-bit for example, the manifest link is http://releases.ubuntu.com/trusty/ubuntu-14.04-desktop-amd64.manifest

So once you have this file, just compare the package listing in it against the listing of all installed packages in your Ubuntu using comm command

To explain what the comm does, it takes input from 2 files - first one supplies the list of all currently installed packages and the second one the manifest file. The -3 opt suppresses lines that both files have and -2 suppresses lines that only the second file (manifest file, that is) has. So in the end your output contains only lines that only file one has and that gives you packages that you installed manually since the OS was installed.

So there you have it.

Edit

If you'd also like to see the package version next to package name in the output, as Slyvain Pineau pointed out, pipe the comm command above to xargs dpkg-query -W -f='${binary:Package} ${Version}\n' so it becomes

@Sylvain Pineau My bad. In my deleted comment just now I misunderstood something and I was wrong about your xarg command being inefficient. Your command is perfectly fine and I've edit my answer to include it
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FlintMay 12 '14 at 14:09

The manifest comparison method from Flint's answer and from http://unix.stackexchange.com/a/3624/9132 includes many dependencies and other packages possibly marked as 'required' and installed automatically. For example, it lists libvlc5 and vlc-data, whereas the method above only lists vlc.

The history.log method from http://askubuntu.com/a/250530/16741 will not list all packages if the logs do not go back as far as the release install. It also contains a lot of upgrade commands that would need to be filtered out.

The dpkg --get-selections method, which is an accepted answer from a similar question, lists all packages and dependencies, including those installed with the release. It does not list only those installed explicitly.